Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Laboratory for Microbiology, Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany
2. LOEWE Center for Synthetic Microbiology, Philipps University Marburg, Marburg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Ectoine and hydroxyectoine are widely synthesized by members of the
Bacteria
and a few members of the
Archaea
as potent osmostress protectants. We have studied the salient features of the osmostress-responsive promoter directing the transcription of the ectoine/hydroxyectoine biosynthetic gene cluster from the plant-root-associated bacterium
Pseudomonas stutzeri
by transferring it into
Escherichia coli
, an enterobacterium that does not produce ectoines naturally. Using
ect-lacZ
reporter fusions, we found that the heterologous
ect
promoter reacted with exquisite sensitivity in its transcriptional profile to graded increases in sustained high salinity, responded to a true osmotic signal, and required the buildup of an osmotically effective gradient across the cytoplasmic membrane for its induction. The involvement of the −10, −35, and spacer regions of the sigma-70-type
ect
promoter in setting promoter strength and response to osmotic stress was assessed through site-directed mutagenesis. Moderate changes in the
ect
promoter sequence that increase its resemblance to housekeeping sigma-70-type promoters of
E. coli
afforded substantially enhanced expression, both in the absence and in the presence of osmotic stress. Building on this set of
ect
promoter mutants, we engineered an
E. coli
chassis strain for the heterologous production of ectoines. This synthetic cell factory lacks the genes for the osmostress-responsive synthesis of trehalose and the compatible solute importers ProP and ProU, and it continuously excretes ectoines into the growth medium. By combining appropriate host strains and different plasmid variants, excretion of ectoine, hydroxyectoine, or a mixture of both compounds was achieved under mild osmotic stress conditions.
IMPORTANCE
Ectoines are compatible solutes, organic osmolytes that are used by microorganisms to fend off the negative consequences of high environmental osmolarity on cellular physiology. An understanding of the salient features of osmostress-responsive promoters directing the expression of the ectoine/hydroxyectoine biosynthetic gene clusters is lacking. We exploited the
ect
promoter from an ectoine/hydroxyectoine-producing soil bacterium for such a study by transferring it into a surrogate bacterial host. Despite the fact that
E. coli
does not synthesize ectoines naturally, the
ect
promoter retained its exquisitely sensitive osmotic control, indicating that osmoregulation of
ect
transcription is an inherent feature of the promoter and its flanking sequences. These sequences were narrowed to a 116-bp DNA fragment. Ectoines have interesting commercial applications. Building on data from a site-directed mutagenesis study of the
ect
promoter, we designed a synthetic cell factory that secretes ectoine, hydroxyectoine, or a mixture of both compounds into the growth medium.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
31 articles.
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